cows go moo

Pondering such inane imponderables exercises our brain just as efficiently as musing
on the weightier issues.

I myself have long wondered why doing this can only be done by females,
what extra bones have males got that prevents us from gazing at the backs of
our own knees ?

Pixie%20Le%20Knot%2010.jpg

By heck, where's my pills? Brings a whole new meaning to "my flexible friend" :)
 
Pondering such inane imponderables exercises our brain just as efficiently as musing
on the weightier issues.

I myself have long wondered why doing this can only be done by females,
what extra bones have males got that prevents us from gazing at the backs of
our own knees ?

Pixie%20Le%20Knot%2010.jpg


Dunno but the Full Nelson is fantastic.
 
Pondering such inane imponderables exercises our brain just as efficiently as musing
on the weightier issues.

I myself have long wondered why doing this can only be done by females,
what extra bones have males got that prevents us from gazing at the backs of
our own knees ? [..]

A few musings:

1) What evidence do you have that this is consistent across all sexed species? Humans, yes, but you're explicitly referring to all sexed species. Dogs, cats, elephants, etc, etc. Even plants.
2) In humans, what evidence do you have that it's consistent across all ages? Adults, yes, adolescents, yes, but children and babies?

3) In adults, there's a tendency for women to be more flexible than men. That could be explained by tendencies towards physiological differences and adaptations to different circumstances (which would also be a factor in tendencies towards physiological differences). The most obvious one is childbirth imposing different selection pressures. There are some structural differences in the pelvic area as a result, enough to make it possible to reliably determine a person's sex from their skeleton on just that basis. Roughly, childbirth and the different roles of men and women for almost all of the existence of humanity and the ancestors of humanity have imposed slightly different selection pressures on men and women which has resulted in a strong tendency for slightly different prioritisation of strength and flexibility.

4) Maybe there's a gendered trend for medical conditions that allow an unusually large degree of movement. What's sometimes called "double jointed". Which looks startling but comes with problems.

It's not universal. When I was the age of the woman in the photo, I might well have able to do that. I was flexible enough to contort myself in weird ways like some sory of human knot sculpture. I haven't grown any extra bones since then, but I have aged and I've grown a lot more muscle (and fat). I was a lot more gracile when I was young, which was part of the reason why I was often mistaken for a woman.

EDIT: I had a look at a summary of hypermobility and wasn't suprised to find that I have a few of the more minor symptoms. Good thing for me that it's only that much - it can cause really serious problems. And it is more common in women than in men.
 
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A few musings:

1) What evidence do you have that this is consistent across all sexed species? Humans, yes, but you're explicitly referring to all sexed species. Dogs, cats, elephants, etc, etc. Even plants.
2) In humans, what evidence do you have that it's consistent across all ages? Adults, yes, adolescents, yes, but children and babies?

You sir, are a total knob.:D

[ I have no evidence to put forward as to your sex, but I would posit that your
propensity to post examples of your verbal diarrhoea leads me to hazard a
guess you are male ].
 
So I was pondering why is it animals make a certain call, ie why don't cows go baa and sheep go moo?
Evolution.

Cows are a lowland grazers, and have evolved a noise that travels well against the background hum of insects and birds, whereas sheep and goats (which have a similar call) are Highland grazers, so have evolved a noise that transmits effectively against the wind of the moors and mountains .

Stick cows on a mountain, and in a couple of dozen generations they'll be bleating like lambs
 
I’d have chose a more palatable word than knob. Mods might take issue with that, despite the smiley.

I don't and I'm the person it was directed against. I take a slight issue with their sexism, but not much because I'm not even slightly surprised by it. I'm also not even slightly surprised that they can't support their initial stated position.
 
Why do dogs "bark" and not "woof"?

Because English is allergic to consistency :)

There's probably a reason for it. Maybe one word is from Old English and the other is from one of the other languages mashed into English...

...hmm, it seems they're both from Old English but "woof" only became used to refer to the noise a dog makes about 200 years ago as an attempt to create a word with the same sound. Prior to that, "bark" (or earlier forms of the word) was the only word in English for the noise a dog makes.

Also, it depends on the nationality of the dog...sort of:

https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/canine-corner/201211/how-dogs-bark-in-different-languages
 
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